Angola Extends JPMorgan Debt Facility With $500 Million Boost

LUANDA, Jan 13 – Angola has secured access to an additional $500 million in financing after extending an existing $1 billion debt facility with JPMorgan for another three years, the country’s finance ministry said on Tuesday.

The new agreement carries an interest rate within 8%, according to the ministry, and replaces a one-year structure agreed with the Wall Street bank in 2024. The original arrangement was executed through a Total Return Swap, a derivative contract that allows Angola to access funding while using government bonds as collateral.

Under the initial deal, JPMorgan provided financing backed by $1.9 billion worth of Angolan sovereign bonds. The structure gave the oil-producing nation access to liquidity while limiting immediate borrowing in traditional debt markets.

Angola’s bonds rallied following news of the extension, with the 2048 maturity trading about one cent higher on the day at 86.97 cents on the dollar. The price move reflects improved sentiment toward the country’s debt after a volatile period earlier in the year.

In April, the risks embedded in the structure were exposed when JPMorgan issued a margin call, requiring Angola to post an additional $200 million in collateral. The trigger was activated after Angolan bond prices fell sharply amid global market turmoil caused by sweeping U.S. trade tariffs.

The government later recovered the additional collateral as bond prices rebounded, easing pressure on the facility and restoring its original balance. The episode highlighted both the flexibility and vulnerabilities of derivative-based financing arrangements for frontier market borrowers, particularly during periods of global stress.

By extending the facility and increasing available funding, Angola is securing longer-term financial breathing room while avoiding immediate reliance on conventional bond issuance. The move also suggests renewed confidence from JPMorgan following the recovery in Angola’s sovereign debt prices.

The extension comes as Angola continues to balance external financing needs with efforts to manage debt risks in an environment of volatile global capital flows and shifting investor appetite for emerging and frontier market assets.